Jamie Marchant's Blog, page 13

July 3, 2017

Wiley Petersen and The Bull Riding Witch

As I mentioned in last week’s post, Rodeo and Research (http://jamie-marchant.blogspot.com/2017/02/rodeo-and-research.html), my best source on Bull Riding and rodeo in general came when I found the website, http://bullridercoach.com/. First, the site itself has a ton of information, including instructional videos on everything to do with bull riding from how to rosin your rope (something I wasn’t even aware they did) to what to do if you get hung up.






They also sell an ebook titled Bull Riding Basics, which was enormously helpful. These things offered me a lot of technical knowledge. I put too much of the technical details into early drafts of the novel, which I then edited out of subsequent drafts. This is always a danger when doing research. Not everything you learn adds to the story, but the more you know, the more you can make sure that the details you do include are accurate and don’t throw your reader out of the story.




Despite how helpful this site was, I was still left with a ton of questions that weren’t covered. Things like: “How do you find out which bull you’ve drawn?” (the bull they are to ride that night) and “Is there any general attitude among bull riders about other participants in the rodeo (ropers, barrel riders, etc.)? Do the other participants in the rodeo have any general attitude about bull riders?” Questions that only a participant would generally be concerned about, but would affect certain scenes in the novel.
 
This is where Wiley Petersen came in. Since I don’t know any bull riders, I use the “contact us” tab on bullridercoash.com. I introduced myself as a fiction writer setting my novel in the world of bull riding and asked if they had anyone who would be willing to answer some questions. Wiley responded that he’d be happy to answer my questions, which he did in a thorough and friendly fashion. He thought some of them were weird, such as when I asked if they could touch the bulls. I wanted to know because Daulphina needed some of the bull’s hair to perform a spell. This was his answer: “We don’t really try to touch the bulls. We just go look at them and try to find the one we’ve drawn by looking at them in the back pens. Most bulls don’t really want to be touched.” I could hear him in my head, saying, “Bull aren’t pets, you know? We don’t get all warm and cozy with them.” I had to ask a follow up question to clarify why I needed to know, and it turns out it wouldn’t be a problem out. Just wait until the bull turns his back and grab a few. He answered my initial questions and any follow up questions that I had. 
 
Only later did I learn that Wiley was one of the country’s top bull riders. He is #16 in the Professional Bull Riders all time money winners. But he couldn’t have been nicer or more helpful.
 
So the moral of the story is, if you don’t know something that effects your story, ask. Most experts are happy to share their knowledge and like it when writer try to get the details right. 
 
One last video of Wiley in action to demonstrate why he will forever remain my bull riding expert:
 





The Bull Riding Witch‘s release date draws near.  On July 17, you’ll be able to get the whole story.


 

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Published on July 03, 2017 01:02

June 30, 2017

Ryan Mueller, debut fantasy author

Meet my guest today, fantasy author Ryan Mueller, as he releases his debut novel, Empire of Chains.



What made you want to become a writer?

When I was young, I always had all these story ideas in my head. I spent a lot of time putting them down in notebooks, usually in the form of imaginary video games. I was a huge fan of RPGs, so naturally my interests tended toward fantasy. Then, when I was ten years old, I first read Harry Potter. I knew from that point on that I wanted to be a writer. [Jamie’s Note: Great books Harry Potter. At least the first three or four times. My son was obsessed with them. I read him the first four nine times. They got a little old by then.]


2. What are your biggest literary influences? Favorite authors and why?


My biggest literary influences would be Brandon Sanderson, Brent Weeks, and Jim Butcher. They have a way of writing high-magic, high-action books that I love. My books have a few more quest elements than theirs, though. More recently, I’ve come to enjoy the works of Phil Tucker, who came in second place in last year’s Self-Published Fantasy Blog Off. Then, of course, there’s The Wheel of Time, which had its issues but will always hold a special place in my heart.


3. Tell us something about how you write? i.e. are you a plotter or a pantser? Do you have any weird or necessary writing habits or rituals?


I’m somewhere in between on the whole plotter/pantser thing. Recently, I’ve been more of a pantser, but I’m not sure that’s entirely accurate. I usually have a general mental outline of where I want the story to go. It’s just a very flexible outline that allows for me to come up with new developments as I’m writing. As far as writing rituals, I pretty much have to have music playing. Usually, it’s some Power Metal or Symphonic Metal. Some of my favorites to listen to while writing are Kamelot, Blind Guardian, Nightwish, and Epica. I also enjoy the pure cheesiness of the Power Metal band Gloryhammer.


4. Could you tell us a bit about your most recent book?


Empire of Chains is a book that has been with me for over a decade now. My first versions of it were terrible and clichéd with a horrible prophecy and a quest straight out of Tolkien fan-fiction. Since then, I’ve evolved as a writer, and I’ve made into a much more complex and interesting story. On the surface, it appears to be a story about overthrowing an evil emperor, but as you read it, you realize the so-called evil emperor isn’t so evil at all. He’s a man willing to do anything to save the world, and for me, those make the most interesting characters. I’m a big fan of anti-villains. That is, they fill the role of a villain in the story, but you could actually look at them as heroes from a different perspective.


5. What else would you like readers to know about you or your work?


When it comes to writing, I’m a big fan of magic and action scenes. Those scenes are the types that flow from my fingertips, and I write a lot of them. Part of the fun of fantasy, for me, is that the fantasy elements allow you to write much more interesting action sequences. You’ll see this love of action in everything I write, including the next three books of World in Chains, which I’ve already drafted and expect to have out by the end of the year, as well as my Sunweaver trilogy, which is already drafted too, and should be out shortly after the rest of World in Chains.


6. Do you have a day job in addition to being a writer?  If so, what do you do during the day?


Currently, my day job is in retail. I work in the Shoe Department of a large retail chain. It’s certainly not an ideal job, though when I’m cleaning up the department at night, I often have the chance to think about story ideas. I’m also going to school for Electrical Engineering at the moment. I still have two years to go. I won’t say I’m in love with the field, but I like it enough that I’ll be all right working in it if I don’t make “quit your day job” money as a writer.


7. If you could be transported to any fictional world, which would it be? Why?


For me, it would be the world of Harry Potter. It was the first fantasy world that really captured my imagination when I was younger. I’d love to go to Hogwarts, as long as it’s in the post-Voldemort era. (As a side note, Microsoft Word actually knows the word Voldemort. I find that amusing.)


Where can we find you online?


Blog: https://ryanwmueller.com/

Website: https://ryanwmueller.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ryanwmuellerauthor/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RW_Mueller

Amazon: amazon.com/author/ryanwmueller

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16822285.Ryan_W_Mueller


Empire of Chains

Five hundred years ago, powerful magic sealed Emperor Darien Warrick inside a ring of mountains fashioned by his own magic. For five hundred years, his subjects have been trapped beside him. Some say he’s evil and these actions were necessary. Others say he’s a man willing to sacrifice anything for the greater good.


To young noblewoman Nadia, he is nothing but a murderer. On the day Warrick’s executioner takes her mother’s head, Nadia dedicates her life to one goal: killing Warrick. She spends her days training with the castle guard, her nights poring over the notes her mother left behind. In them, she finds the location of the only spell that can defeat the immortal sorcerer. But it feels too convenient. If she is to succeed in her quest, she must figure out Warrick’s true motivations.


For young woodsman Markus, Warrick is the man who owns him. Markus has spent his entire life training to become an Imperial Guard, but it’s a future he can’t stomach. However, it’s the only option he has, or at least the only sane one–until he meets Nadia.


Reformed thief Berig doesn’t care about Warrick one way or the other. Berig would rather keep his head down and try to scratch out what meager living he can. But in a world like this, he’ll never get what he wants.


After all, Warrick has other plans.


Excerpt

Prologue


The night Nadia lost her mother started like any other.


She and her mother were practicing their swordplay in the castle’s courtyard, evening sunlight glinting off their blunted blades. Nadia tried to ignore the sweat dripping into her eyes, focus on her footwork, and follow her instincts.


Her mother scored a hit on her chest. “You aren’t defending yourself well enough.”


“The sword is starting to feel heavy. I need a chance to rest.”


“Warrick isn’t resting.”


“I know, but—”


“I don’t want to hear your arguments,” her mother said. “If Warrick finds out what we’re planning, he will not hesitate to kill us.” She gripped Nadia’s shoulders, her touch firm but loving. “Both of us.”


Nadia had no response for that. She was only twelve, but she wasn’t stupid. She understood the dangers involved in opposing the emperor. They all did.


She hid her anger, though. Her mother had taught her to conceal her emotions. As nobility, they often had to speak with Emperor Warrick, and Nadia could not let slip that she intended to kill the tyrant.


“I know I sound angry,” her mother said, “but you’ve done well today. Perhaps we should wash up and join your father for dinner.”


After bathing, they joined Nadia’s father in the castle’s dining chamber, at a long wooden table draped in a red tablecloth. Magical torches cast blue light upon him as he sat alone, poking thoughtfully at some chicken with his fork.


“Is everything all right?” asked Nadia’s mother, taking a seat next to him.


“Oh, yes, everything’s fine.” He went back to his food, avoiding both their gazes.


“Father, are you sure nothing is wrong?”


He laid his silverware aside, leaving half his plate uneaten. His abrupt departure from the table caught Nadia by surprise. She tried to catch his attention, but he left the chamber, looking like a defeated man.


“Do you have any idea what might be bothering him?” Nadia asked her mother.


“I don’t know. I’ve never seen him like this before. Perhaps Warrick is making his life difficult again.”


“Warrick makes all our lives difficult.”


If Ryan has intrigued you, his book can be purchased below:




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Published on June 30, 2017 01:49

June 29, 2017

The Last Wife of Attila the Hun Book Tour & Giveaway




The Last Wife of Attila the Hun
by Joan Schweighardt
Genre: Epic Fantasy, Historical


Two threads are flawlessly woven together in this sweeping historical

novel. In one, Gudrun, a Burgundian noblewoman, dares to enter the

City of Attila to give its ruler what she hopes is a cursed sword;

the second reveals the unimaginable events that have driven her to

this mission. Based in part on the true history of the times and in

part on the same Nordic legends that inspired Wagner’s Ring Cycle

and other great works of art, The Last Wife of Attila the Hun offers

readers a thrilling story of love, betrayal, passion and revenge, all

set against an ancient backdrop itself gushing with intrigue.




Goodreads * Amazon




Joan Schweighardt is the author of five novels, and more on the way. In

addition to her own writing projects, she writes, ghostwrites, and

edits for individuals and corporations.


Website * Facebook * Twitter * Amazon * Goodreads




Follow the tour HERE

for exclusive excerpts, guest posts and a giveaway
!

a Rafflecopter giveaway



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Published on June 29, 2017 06:21

June 28, 2017

Cassandra Fear, Demon Hunter

Welcome today’s guest, Cassandra Fear, and enter the world of demons and angels.


Cassandra Fear lives in Ohio with her husband, two kids and two dogs. Hiking, taking care of her fish tank and reading are her favorite hobbies. She loves chocolate, hates driving in the snow, and could eat macaroni and cheese every day. In her spare time, she loves to write and has always dreamed of becoming an author. Her dreams will become reality with her first book, Above the Flames.


Interview

Tell us a little about yourself?

I love to write, of course, and read, but I am a mom of two and a wife of thirteen years. I have two dogs and a cat and a mortgage. Underneath the books, I am just an ordinary person trying to put my stamp on the world, one book at a time.


2. What made you want to become a writer?


I have always been a writer. In high school my teachers used to yell at me when I turned my essays in and say, “This is not creative writing class.” I knew then and there I wanted to write, but life got in the way for a while.


3. What are you reading at the moment? Would you recommend it to readers of this blog? Why?


I am devouring everything from Sarah J Maas and definitely recommend.


4. Could you tell us a bit about your most recent book?


I would like to share with you Above the Flames, which is the first book I wrote. It follows the story of Jasmine Reynolds as she finds out what has always made her different from everyone else actually has the ability to stop the demons from taking over her world. She goes through obstacle after obstacle and has a hard time finding who she is, but eventually she does. If you like demons and angels, this book is an exciting adventure into their world.


5. If you could have dinner (and dessert) with any fictional character who would it be and why?


Elizabeth Bennet from Pride and Prejudice. For one, I always wanted to visit the English countryside, and for two, I would love to see what she would wear in this day and age. Haha.


6. Titles have always been extremely difficult for me. How do you come up with yours?


I have a hard time with them too, but I had the titles for all three books in The Flames Trilogy before I even wrote one word. It is crazy how that happens sometimes. I usually brainstorm with my friends until I find the perfect title.


Where can we find you online? (please cut and paste links):


Blog: www.writingforwords.wordpress.com and www.cassandrafear.com

Website: www.cassandrafear.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/cassandrafearauthor

Twitter: www.twitter.com/CassieFear

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Cassandra-Fear/e/B01DR0T4FQ/

Instagram: @cfear_27


Above the Flames

Jasmine’s sixteenth birthday was the worst ever…


All in one day, her dad died, she met a demon, and her mother rejected her existence forever. After all, the demon who killed her dad was there to take her, and all because of her stupid powers—the ability to conjure blue flames.


Two years later, she’s happy. But happy never lasts…


After moving to Idaho to live with her grandparents, Jasmine has a new life. Almost nobody knows about her powers, and she’s just a normal teenager with normal problems. Then comes her eighteenth birthday—and the earthquake that changes her world forever.


An army of demons rise from Hell. And Jasmine is right in the middle of the battle…


When demons claw their way to Earth, Jasmine is surrounded by hundreds of fire-eyed beasts. Worse, she is captured by a big-shot demon named Bael. He’s a tricky foe with a chip on his shoulder—and the desire to make Jasmine use her powers for evil.


Amon is a fallen angel with an attitude—and everything to lose.


Successfully escaping the underworld undetected, Amon is on a quest to regain God’s grace when he rescues Jasmine from the clutches of a particularly nasty demon he knows all too well. The attraction between him and the not-entirely-human captive is instantaneous. Heavenly sparks fly, but ideas of romance will have to wait. First they have to stop the demon race from wiping out the mortal realm. Humanity’s fate rests in their hands.


Can two fallen angels rise above the flames to ensure a future for mankind? Or will Jasmine and Amon’s souls be bound together—in hell?


Excerpt

She continued toward the sidewalk, taking in all the small shops that lined Main Street. Each side looked the same. Blood splatters. Broken windows. Glass sprinkling the street. She saw another body sprawled face down on the sidewalk, a puddle of crimson soaking into the concrete, turning dark brown. It seemed like she was walking through a haunted house, not the town she fell in love with.


Jasmine covered her mouth and she gasped as she passed Mr. Gregory’s barber shop, where Pa always got his hair cut. Mr. Gregory sat with his back to the wall in the doorway; his neck cut open and red streams flowing down it.


Footsteps pounded the asphalt behind her, and she knew the others had joined her, but it didn’t register. She rushed to the barbershop and grabbed the barber’s wrist, checked for a pulse, and let his dead arm fall to the ground. It landed with a thud that echoed off the walls in the small entrance. She cringed at the sight of blood coating his skin. Her stomach roiled and she stepped backward until she slammed into the wall behind. She turned her head, not wanting to see what lay before her.


Caim came forward and crouched down next to the body. “His body’s still warm. They can’t be far.”


“Everyone stay close. We don’t know what we are walking into,” Lamia said quietly but firmly.


Jasmine walked forward mechanically, and Beau matched her pace. She took steps, one after the other, like a zombie. Trash littered the sidewalks. Glass shards crunched under her feet as she followed Caim. The coppery smell of blood filled her senses. Dead bodies surrounded her. So many bodies.


Her voice shook. “Is there anyone left alive?”


 


If Cassandra has piqued your interest, tell us in the comments. Book can be purchased here:




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Published on June 28, 2017 06:17

June 26, 2017

Rodeo and Research

You may rightly wonder how a college teacher of literature and all round city girl knows enough about rodeo to set her novel in that world, especially when she views rodeo as a fascinating anachronism. (See last week’s post http://jamie-marchant.blogspot.com/2017/02/inspiration-for-bull-riding-witch.html).




After I attended that rodeo discussed last week, I kept attending more as the idea for The Bull Riding Witch simmered in my head. The incredible skill combined with the complete uselessness of such skill in the modern world continued to work on my imagination. When I was read to start writing the book, having attended a hand full of rodeos was hardly sufficient knowledge of the world of rodeo.

I tried to find a book on bull riding. There are a ton of romance novels starring bull riders.



 





But I couldn’t find a “how-to” book. The best I could come up with was Fried Twinkies, Buckle Bunnies, & Bull Riders: A Year Inside the Professional Bull Riders Tour.
 

 
I read it. It taught me some things. In case you are wondering, the flank strap does not go around the bull’s testicles. It would be impossible to put it there even if they wanted to. It is an irritant, but the bull isn’t in real pain. I also learned that buckle bunnies, rodeo groupies, will ask bull riders to sign their breasts. (That detail didn’t end up in my book). But it didn’t tell me what I really needed to know, especially Joshua Killenyen, my bull rider is distinctly small time.

I did some internet research. While the bulls don’t often get hurt, the riders do. Injuries, often serious ones, are ridiculously common. This article from the LA Times sums it up with examples from one bull rider:

Bulls ripped open his chin, blackened his eyes and broke his nose, ribs and legs — the right leg three times.
But that all paled in comparison to what happened about a year and a half ago, when Beau Schroeder climbed on a snorting, bucking 1,800-pound monster called 800 Night Moves.
The bull threw him into the red dirt of the arena in Fort Mojave, Ariz. Its massive hooves trampled his chest, punctured his lungs and tore open his throat.
He couldn’t walk. He couldn’t talk. He could barely breathe.
Bull riders can even be killed or paralyzed. As bull riders like to say, “It’s not whether they’ll get hurt, it’s when.” Bull riders are crazy about it, too. The rider in the above story was back riding only two months after almost being killed. And that’s considered normal in bull riding.
I hit pay dirt when I cam across bullridercoach.com. More on that and Wiley Peterson next week.
Remember The Bull Riding Witch is coming on July 17.

What’s the strangest thing you’ve research? Tell us in the comments below.
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Published on June 26, 2017 01:47

June 23, 2017

What does Solar want? Character as Desire

In character development, one of the most, if not the most important, aspect to think about is your character’s motivation. What does he or she want? It is a character’s desires that controls their actions, and if you don’t have a clear idea of what those desires are, you end up with an inconsistent character that acts in ways that don’t make sense. You need to know what your character desires in the abstract as well as what achieving that desire will mean practically in any specific situation.


King Solar in The Goddess’s Choice has ruled over 50 years of unbroken peace. What he wants is for that peace to outlive him, to be the legacy he leaves his people. This is his great desire, what he wants in the abstract. For that to happen practically speaking, he knows he must have an heir. Without one, rival claimants will tear the country apart. But he reaches 70 without having fathered an child despite having had two wives and numerous mistresses. The priest tell him that the only way for him to have an heir is to take a wife just entering puberty. He finds this distasteful, but since peace is so important to him, he takes a thirteen-year-old wife. If you don’t understand his motivation, this might seem a little creepy of him, but if you know what he wants, it makes perfect sense. Achieving his desire of peace means in this particular circumstance he must marry someone he views as a child. When his young wife Fenella also fails to get pregnant, he is forced to face that fact that he is indeed sterile and decides that if he can’t get his own heir, someone else will have to do it for him. He manipulates circumstances so that Fenella will have an affair. Thereby, he gets his heir.


However, this complicates his life in ways that he hadn’t anticipated. Solar, like many characters, finds himself wanting more than one thing. Before Samantha’s birth, the nearly only focus of his desire was for lasting peace, but against his expectations, he falls in love with his daughter and finds himself wanting her to be happy.


 


When those two desires come into conflict, he becomes indecisive. Samantha is so young that he knows she needs a strong husband to ensure the stability of her reign, but Samantha doesn’t want to marry, and he is convinced that she will hate him if he forces her into a marriage. Desire #1 one–continued peace–is now in conflict with desire #2–his daughter’s happiness. Which will win out? You’ll have to read The Goddess’s Choice to find out.


 


What do your character want? Discuss them in the comments.


 


 


 

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Published on June 23, 2017 01:41

June 22, 2017

A Meddle of Wizards Cover Reveal




A MEDDLE OF WIZARDS
by Alexandra Rushe
Genre: Fantasy
Pub Date: 1/9/2018


Welcome to Tandara, where gods are

fickle, nightmares are real, and trolls make excellent bakers . . .
Raine Stewart is convinced she’ll die

young and alone in Alabama, the victim of a chronic, mysterious

illness. Until a man in a shabby cloak steps out of her mirror and

demands her help to defeat a bloodthirsty wizard.
Raine shrugs it off as a

hallucination—just one more insult from her failing body—and

orders her intruder to take a hike. But the handsome figment of her

imagination won’t take no for an answer, and kidnaps her anyway,

launching her into a world of utmost danger—and urgent purpose.
Ruled by unpredictable gods and

unstable nations, Tandara is a land of shapeshifters and

weather-workers, queens and legends. Ravenous monsters and greedy

bounty hunters patrol unforgiving mountains. Riverboats pulled by

sea-cattle trade down broad waterways. And creatures of nightmare

stalk Raine herself, vicious in the pursuit of her blood.
But Raine isn’t helpless or alone.

She’s part of a band as resourceful as it is odd: a mage-shy

warrior, a tattered wizard, a tenderhearted giant, and a prickly

troll sorceress. Her new friends swear she has powers of her own.

If she can stay under their protection, she might just live long

enough to find out…

Amazon * B&N * Google * Kobo



Alexandra Rushe was born in South

Alabama, and grew up climbing trees, searching for sprites and

fairies in the nearby woods, and dreaming of other worlds. The

daughter of an English teacher and a small-town judge, Rushe

developed a love of reading early on, and haunted the school and

local libraries, devouring fairy tales, myths, and tales of

adventure. In the seventh grade, she stumbled across a worn copy of

The Hobbit, and was forever changed. She loves fantasy and

paranormal, but only between the pages of a book—the flying monkeys

in The Wizard of Oz give her the creeps, and she eschews horror

movies. A psychic friend once proclaimed the linen closet in Rushe’s

bedroom a portal to another dimension, and she hasn’t slept well

since. Rushe is a world-class chicken.


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Published on June 22, 2017 04:11

Y’Keta Book Tour & Giveaway




Y’keta
The Sky Road Trilogy Book 1
by Sandra Hurst
Genre: Epic Fantasy



Banished. Cast out. Powerless. Y’keta is exiled to the small village of

Esquialt as his father’s punishment for his rebellious spirit.

Village tradition gives him one Cycle, from spring to spring, to earn

the right to stay.




The villagers have a legend about mighty beings called the Waki’tani,

mythical lords of the wind and lightning who can shapeshift into

human form. Y’keta knows the truth behind these stories. Could there

be more to them than just tales shared around the campfire?

If Y’keta reveals what he knows to the villagers, it will tear their

history and traditions apart…but sharing his secrets may be their

only hope for survival when Esquialt is threatened by the brutal,

ferociously destructive Utlaak.

Loosely based on the Thunderbird of North American legend, Y’keta is an epic

fantasy set in an ancient world where legends walk and the Sky Road

offers a way to the stars.

Goodreads * Amazon





Hi, my name is Sandra Hurst, the author of the Sky Road fantasy

series.
As a child growing up in England stories and legends

surrounded me, I learned how important imagination was. When I was 8,

we moved to northern Canada and the legends changed. Stories of the

Fae and the little people were replaced by legends of the Thunderbird

and stories of the woodlands. I never stood a chance. What could I be

but a writer?
Growing up in Northern Alberta gave me a great love and respect for the wild

lands and indigenous cultures which made its way into the worlds I

create. A mythmaker at heart, I started writing poetry in middle school and

graduated to epic fantasy.
Myths give us a way to interpret the world past our normal experience. To

ask questions and explore answers in a larger-than-life game of ‘what

if.’ We need to make room for myths and mythmakers in our fact

driven world. To give space for worlds that are brighter and clearer

than our own. For it is in doing so, that we have room to become more

fully human.
My first book, Y’keta , is loosely based on the Thunderbird of North American legend, Y’keta is a Young Adult, high

fantasy set in an ancient world where legends walk and the Sky Road

offers a way to the stars.
I now live in Calgary, Alberta with my husband and son, both of whom I

love dearly, and have put for sale on e-bay when their behaviour

demanded it. My day to day life is a balance between my outside life

as a paralegal counsellor and my inner life as an author/poet. In

between, I work on courses to improve my writing, learning the Cree

Language, book reviews and blogging on my website, and studying

mythologies from around the world.

Website * Facebook * Twitter * Amazon * Goodreads



  Hi, my name is Sandra Hurst and I’m a YA Fantasy author, thank you for the opportunity to talk to you and your readers today!


 


  What is something unique/quirky about you?


Ooh, you really want to go there? I think that answer would depend on who you talk to. My son would cringe and point to ‘opera nights,’ evenings when I don’t speak and insist on singing my answers to any questions. My husband might point to my fits of insomnia and my late-night Facebook addiction. But really! You meet the best people online at 3am.


If there is one thing I would say was unique or quirky about me it would be my breadth of interests, I’m a bit of a Hermione, a collector of odd facts and knowledge about anything from the Kaiju culture of manga Japan, to Shakespeare, to Opera, or the band Nightwish. There isnt much that I wont listen to, read, learn about and find value in.




What inspired you to write this book?


My first novel, Y’keta, came out of two unconnected events about four years ago, the first was an off the cuff comment made by a relative on the reactions she dealt with when she came out as LGBTQ in the early 80’s, the other was a long night sitting beside a campfire in Grande Cache, Alberta watching the Northern Lights dance over the horizon.


Myths give us a way to interpret the world past our normal experience. To ask questions and explore answers in a larger-than-life game of ‘what if.’ In my novel, Y’keta, the question is about identity. Is Y’keta willing to give up his identity to please his father? Is he willing to risk being honest about himself, even though he may lose everything he has grown to love.




Who is your hero and why?


I don’t think that I have a real-life hero. There are so many people that inspire me, whether they are historical figures or literary ones. I think the common thread in all of them is that they had the opportunity to quit, every reason to say I’m too old, too tired, it’s just easier to let it be someone else’s problem. This kind of hero, unwilling, often flawed, yet willing to step up, gets me every time. These heroes all have one thing in common. They are people very much like I am, broken and damaged people just trying to do their best with the time they are given.


As far as literary heroes, I love the authors who can make words dance and sentences MEAN things. This has led me to authors like Guy Gavriel Kay, and Don Dellilo. I would give my left ovary (not so dramatic a thing since at 54 those parts are hardly crucial) to sit down with either of these gentlemen, or even better their writing notes, for an afternoon!



What book do you think everyone should read?


Mine? Oh, you mean someone else’s book! Picking one book that everyone should read? Oh, that’s hard. If I had to make a choice I think that I would choose The Fionavar Tapestry by Guy Gavriel Kay. The writing is lyrical and holds enough legends, enough magic, enough historical reference, and enough action to please most people and to delight word birds such as me.




Describe your writing style.


I think that question would be more appropriately asked of someone who has read my work. It’s hard to describe yourself without being either self congratulatory or somewhat delusional. If I had to say something about my own style, I think I would call it lyrical. I was a poet long before I accepted the challenge of writing prose. I would compare my style to current writers I think I would say that it is somewhat like early work by Guy Gavriel Kay or Neil Gaiman, although I think I smell the self-delusion rising on that one.



What makes a good story?


To me, a good story is one that has characters with depth and nuance. I think it’s important that the characters in a story face conflict, something has to push them out of their safe zones and into situations that they aren’t prepared for, whether that something is a ‘bad guy or an internal crisis. The book has to be driven by the growth and decisions of the character, not just a plot that moves them from place to place like players on a chess board.






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Published on June 22, 2017 01:51

June 19, 2017

Inspiration for The Bull Riding Witch

You may wonder why a college English teacher and overall fantasy fan decided to write a novel set in the rodeo. The inspiration for The Bull Riding Witch came when I went to a rodeo to help my husband sell concessions to raise money for a nonprofit he ran at the time. I hadn’t been to a rodeo since I was a young child and had no interest in doing so.


But as I watched this rodeo, I found in fascinating, in a they-still-do-this-thing way. In The Bull Riding Witch, I talk about the Holy Trinity of Rodeo: “America, God, and Ford trucks.” The announcer discuss each aspect of the Holy Trinity with equal gravity and seriousness; so much so, it seemed almost a parody of itself. I won’t talk about the trucks, but believe, they were equally serious about them. I may have gotten the order of some of the following mixed up, but not the earnestness with which they are pursued.


They began the rodeo with an over-the-top patriotic display. While it is fairly typical to sing the national anthem at sporting events, none of the rest of what rodeo does is. None of the videos in this post are from a rodeo I attended because I’ve never taken one, but they are typical of what I’ve witnessed and demonstrate how seriously rodeo takes the Holy Trinity. They have a single rider holding a huge flag ride around the arena when playing a patriotic country song. Although the riders I’ve seen have always been women, this is otherwise typical, as is the announcement beforehand honoring veterans and asking them to stand to be recognized.








And since one big flag isn’t enough, then comes the rodeo drill team in which all members carry smaller flags while riding in patterns, and patriotic country music still playing.






 



 


After the patriotic display, the announcer begins the rodeo with a prayer and a reminder that rodeo is the only sport to still start by giving praise and thanks to God. I wish I could remember the words of the prayer because it struck me as nearly ludicrous the seriousness he prayed for the rodeo performers and their bravery as well as extremely self-congratulatory that rodeo is dedicated to God. You can’t make this stuff up.


 







The Holy Trinity did fascinate me, but it was the rest of the rodeo out of which Daulphina, the bull riding witch, was born.What impressed me was the incredible skill of the participants combined with the pointlessness of developing such a skill. This was particularly notable in the team roping event, in which one rider has to rope the head of the calf and the other the heel. Watch some of them doing it:






Think how incredibly difficult that would be to do and the hours and hours of practice and dedication needed to perfect this skill, but at the same time, why? What makes it worthwhile to stretch a calf out like that? I know sports don’t have a practical purpose, but these seemed to harken back to an era that died 100 years ago.

Most fascinating of all was the bull riding, which always comes last in the rodeo. When you watch someone who’s good at it, like Wiley Petersen, it may not seem so difficult. Wiley was my consultant on all things rodeo, but I’ll talk more about him tomorrow.





You only have to stay on for 8 seconds, which may not seem like a lot, but at the first rodeo I went to as an adult, not a single one of the riders did it. As I’ve learned since, there is a lot more skill in staying on the bull than it appears to a novice. These are more typical of what I saw than Wiley’s ride.






When you get bucked off these bulls, you have a 2000 pound animal crashing its hooves down around you. That weight coming down on a rider has killed far more than one bull rider. Notice also how often they get hung up with their hand stuck in the rope while the bull throws them around like a rag doll. Trying something like this is insane. The list of injuries bull riders get is impressively long, and they all get hurt. They say it isn’t a matter of whether you get hurt, but when you get hurt. Often the injuries are extremely serious, and if it doesn’t kill you, it can paralyze you. I couldn’t imagine why anyone would subject themselves to this, especially for the few hundred dollars they could win at the rodeo I attended, and if you don’t win, you don’t get a dime. (At the PBR championships, you can win a lot more than a few hundred, but not at these local small time ones.)

While I was watching the bull riding, Daulphina was born. I thought someone has to set a fantasy book in this world. This setting is just too good to ignore, and I’ve never seen a fantasy book set in rodeo. If you know of one, tells us about in the comments below. It took a few years for her story to take shape because I was working on other projects at the time, but The Bull Riding Witch will be available soon.

Remember, I am giving away two signed print copies and two ebooks of The Bull Riding Witch when it is released. I have added a grand prize of a $25 Amazon gift card. To enter the contest, subscribe to my newsletter (see the sidebar) or comment on any of the posts in my blog. Each comment equals one entry, and you can enter as many times as you like.

Tell us about your experience with rodeo or the inspiration for your latest book.
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Published on June 19, 2017 01:57

June 16, 2017

Summary versus Scene

Summary versus Scene. What are they? When do you choose one over the other?*


Summary is where you take what happened in a relatively long period of time and convey it in a short space. It compresses time and detail, and it is mostly used to transition between scenes, to jump in time when nothing of vital importance happens to the story, or to fill in bits of background. It tells things that are necessary to know for the story to make sense, but aren’t as significant to the plot or development of the character. Summary should be used sparingly and generally only in short sections. Think of the montage technique in film making.


In Scene, on the other hand, you deal at length with what happened in a short period of time. Scene invites the reader into the story and makes them part of the action. Scene makes your readers see, feel, smell, taste, and hear what it happening. It is in scene where everything important should happen.


This is the beginning scene from The Bull Riding Witch:


I woke with my head pounding and my tongue coated with the fur balls of ten thousand cats. I nearly gagged at the stench that filled the air, a scent that combined the reek of inside of a knight’s armor after jousting with the odor of rotting flesh.
Confused, I examined my surroundings. Hung on the wall facing me was a portrait of a huge bull with its head down and its heels kicked high into the air. Incredibly, a man, hanging onto a rope with only one hand, sat on the bull’s back. Why would anyone ride a bull? Bulls were dangerous and impossible to control.
Piled high on the bedside table were plates covered with the remains of several meals, bowls with a few dregs of sour milk, and empty bottles. The sheet I laid on was stained with various substances I didn’t want to identify. Where was I? This was certainly no place worthy of me, the crown princess. Maybe I had somehow ended in the servants’ quarters, although I couldn’t imagine how.
I tried to sit up, and my head felt as if it were going to split in two. I groaned, and the sound was deep and masculine. What the . . .? I looked down at my arms. They were muscular and covered with hair. I grabbed my naked chest. My breasts were entirely flat, and my chest was covered with thick, coarse hair. When I rubbed my hand across my face, I felt thick stubble. I looked down at the short clothes, which were the only thing I was wearing; there was a bulge that just shouldn’t have been there. I lifted the waistband and peeked. Dear gods, how had I gotten one of those? I poked it with my finger, and it twitched. I snapped the waistband closed and jumped away, but I couldn’t get away from the body I was wearing.
            My breath came in dizzying gasps, and my pulse raced. This was just a dream, I told myself. It couldn’t be real.

 


You feel the thickness of her tongue, smell the stench, see the bull riding poster, and sense her confusion. You are with Daulphina coming awake in a body that isn’t hers. A little bit later in the first chapter, I have a short summary of how she got there:


I tried to think back to how this could have happened. I’d been going to the Temple of Cailleach to meet my lover. Clenyeth had told me he had important information and I should come alone. Clenyeth and I had had to be careful. If my father found out about us, Clenyeth could hang.
I’d seen Clenyeth near the entrance to the cave that housed Cailleach’s temple. As I hurried toward him, someone had grabbed me from behind and put a cloth that smelled sickly sweet over my mouth and nose, and then . . . And then . . .
 And then, I woke up as a man.

 


This gives the reader necessary background information, but they don’t experience it the same way as you do the scene. They aren’t there with her. It tells them things, but it doesn’t invite them into the story.


So a general rule, if it’s important, make it scene.


Share your thoughts on writing in the comments below.


*Disclaimer: The only unbreakable rule in fiction writing is “Does it work?” However, there are things that work more often than not. Make sure you understand a rule before you decide to break it in your case.

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Published on June 16, 2017 01:25